An introduction to the Kismet packet sniffer


 
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Old 07-03-2008
An introduction to the Kismet packet sniffer

Thu, 03 Jul 2008 15:00:00 GMT
Kismet is a wireless "detector, sniffer, and intrusion detection system," and one of the growing list of essential open source tools for computer network security professionals. Kismet runs on any POSIX-compliant platform, including Windows, Mac OS X, and BSD, but Linux is the preferred platform because it has more unencumbered RFMON-capable drivers than any of the others.


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pfopen(3)						     Library Functions Manual							 pfopen(3)

NAME
pfopen - Open a packet filter file SYNOPSIS
pfopen(ifname, flags) char *ifname; int flags; DESCRIPTION
The packet filter (see packetfilter(7)) provides raw access to Ethernets and similar network data link layers. The routine pfopen is used to open a packet filter file descriptor. The routine hides various details about the way packet filter files are opened and named. The ifname argument is a pointer to a null-terminated string containing the name of the interface for which the application is opening the packet filter. This name may be the name of an actual interface on the system (for example, ln0) or it may be a pseudo-interface name of the form pfn, used to specify the nth interface attached to the system. For example, pf0 specifies the first such interface. If ifname is NULL, the default interface (pf0) is used. The flags argument has the same meaning as the corresponding argument to the open(2) system call. The file descriptor returned by pfopen is otherwise identical to one returned by open(2). ERRORS
The pfopen routine returns a negative integer if the file could not be opened. This may be because of resource limitations, or because the specified interface does not exist. RELATED INFORMATION
Commands: open(2) Files: bpf(7), packetfilter(7) delim off pfopen(3)